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How many people really care if words sound different than how they are spelled? In an Aug. In a region where Indian and European languages have intermarried for centuries, the pronunciations of place names can be a guessing game with obscure rules. Even the provenance of a classic California joke, a localized variant of which I used to kick off the first column, is a subject of controversy.
Don Freeman offered a version in a San Diego Union column. Robert Hall, who grew up in Lemon Grove, remembered being excited that his family was moving to Spring Valley. Then go about 2 miles. Hall pedaled back and forth searching for Hammershaw and finally returned home.
He sent a short history lesson in the form of a pronunciation guide with a sweetly gross kicker :. The late Harriet Wade, former president of the Santee Historical Society, made it a kind of personal mission to correct people who mistakenly called him COW-els.
By the way, Harriet told me that George Cowles worked so hard trying to make Cowleston a success that it killed him. Imagine the other gem streets getting the same treatment. You know, that stone some people scratch their calluses off with. Some people seem to think it's pronounced pyumiss. It's puhmiss. This is definitely going to come up at some point. You just know it. Probably when you're talking to the head of research or an IT guy. You went to a wedding.
You seem to believe you enjoyed the nuptuals. Sadly, you didn't. You got drunk and didn't quite grasp how to pronounce it. It's understandable. At least, to me it is. Others, though, may not be as tolerant. It really isn't mischievious. I know it should be. I know it sounds better. You can use it with me. But not, I suspect, with some picky, self-important apparatchik.
You might think this is pronounced hehjehmohny. Heh, no. The pedants insist it's heJEHmuhnee. Because they have hegemony over these things. Carla Prieto. Gina Provenzano. Hanna Raskin.
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